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Re: BEGINNER PLANS FOR SCIENCE PROJECT PLEASE HELP
Original poster: "Philip Brinkman" <peeceebee-at-mindspring-dot-com>
For my spark gap (the Richad Quick type) I just glued the copper pipes in
place (I used 7 pipes) spaced them with a penny ( 1 mm) dont mess with all
the hole drilling and bolting the pipes in place...just some 2 part epoxy
works great..fast and strong. I use my wife's hair dryer to quench the
spark and cool it off.
> [Original Message]
> From: Tesla list <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
> To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
> Date: 11/20/2003 9:55:13 AM
> Subject: Re: BEGINNER PLANS FOR SCIENCE PROJECT PLEASE HELP
>
> Original poster: "Jim Lux" <jimlux-at-earthlink-dot-net>
>
> Here we go with all the opinion stuff... I'd really, really recommend
> against the carriage bolt needle gap (ends of the bolts are the gap) or
> hemisphere gap (heads of the bolt) approach, and advocate the "3 copper
> tube" gap. The cost is about the same.
>
> a) The point on the needle gap gets very hot very quickly, radically
> changing the spark gap characteristics. This makes tuning a problem,
> because as the coil goes into and out of tune, the current through the gap
> changes, changing the heating, changing the timing relative to the AC
> charging cycle, etc.
>
> b) Thermally, it's hard to cool the needle gap, because the entire heat
flow
> path is through the bolt, and steel just isn't all that wonderful a
> conductor, either electrical or thermal. It also doesn't have much surface
> area.
>
> c) You've got to figure out some sort of wire lugs to attach the wires to
> the gap terminals either way.
>
> d) Adjusting the needle gap is a pain. You have to have two nuts on each
> bolt, some sort of thing to stick the bolt through (usually an angle
bracket
> or a piece of plastic. If you use plastic, there's the "melting support"
> problem.
>
> e) Most hardware store bolts (unless you use brass carriage bolts, which
are
> hard to find in bigger (1/4" and up) sizes) are plated with either Cadmium
> or Zinc, both of which are toxic and will be vaporized by the spark. To
get
> a reasonable gap size with this approach, you're looking at 1/4" carriage
> bolts minimum, and probably something like 3/8".
>
> ---
> with a 3 copper tube gap, the spark area is spread over the entire length
of
> the tube, so you're less likely to get little redhot spots
> with a 3 copper tube gap, two of the tubes (which the wires are connected
> to) can be permanently attached and don't ever need to move. All the
> adjustment is done with the third tube
> It's very easy to make a cooled/blown 3 tube gap, which greatly improves
> performance, even on a small NST powered coil
>
> On my 15/30 powered coil, changing from a bolt head gap to copper pipe
> dramatically improved performance, and adding a small muffin fan to blow
> over the pipes also greatly improved performance.
>
> Arrange the tubes in a triangle (axes of tube parallel)
> A B
> O O
> O
> C
>
> A and B are bolted down, and have the two HV wires attached. C is the
> adjustable one. There are lots of ways to attach them, but a bolt through
> the length, with a suitable washer over the end, works very nicely.
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
> To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
> Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2003 7:36 PM
> Subject: Re: BEGINNER PLANS FOR SCIENCE PROJECT PLEASE HELP
>
>
> > Original poster: "Laurence Davis" <meknar-at-hotmail-dot-com>
> >
> > Ravi,
> > the multi-gap spark gap designs are helpful for performance for
medium
> > to larger coils,
> > but you can also build a simple single point gap. It won't perform as
> > well, but still provides the
> > function of a spark gap. A single point gap can be as simple as two
> > carriage bolts mounted on L brackets.
> >
> > I'm sure you've read the tesla safety faq's, but do so if you haven't.
It
> > hasn't been mentioned,
> > but remember the spark gap is comparable to a welders spark, which
means
> > DON'T look directly
> > at it. Use a welding shield from a mask and you can get these
separately.
> > Even if you know
> > the safety issue here, kids and teachers in your class may
> > not. Electricity can be fun, but blindness
> > is not.
> >
> > be safe.
> >
> > just my 2 cents.
> > larry.
> >
> > _
> >
> >
>